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Her Vesper Song.
The Summer lightning comes and goesIn one pale cloud above the hill,As if within its soft reposeA burning heart were never still -As in my bosom pulses beatBefore the coming of his feet.All drugged with odorous sleep, the roseBreathes dewy balm about the place,As if the dreams the garden knowsTook immaterial form and face -As in my heart sweet thoughts ariseBeneath the ardour of his eyes.The moon above the darkness showsAn orb of silvery snow and fire,As if the night would now discloseTo heav'n her one divine desire -As in the rapture of his kissAll of my soul is drawn to his.The cloud, it knows not that it glows;The rose knows nothing of its scent;Nor knows the moon that it bestowsLight on...
Madison Julius Cawein
Death Chant
Viewless essence, thin and bare,Well nigh melted into air,Still with fondness hovering nearThe earthly form thou once didst wear,Pause upon thy pinion's flight;Be thy course to left or right,Be thou doomed to soar or sink,Pause upon the awful brink.To avenge the deed expellingThee untimely from thy dwelling,Mystic force thou shalt retainO'er the blood and o'er the brain.When the form thou shalt espyThat darken'd on thy closing eye,When the footstep thou shalt hearThat thrill'd upon thy dying ear,Then strange sympathies shall wake,The flesh shall thrill, the nerves shall quake,The wounds renew their clotter'd flood,And every drop cry blood for blood!
Walter Scott
The Bride Of A Year.
She stands in front of her mirror With bright and joyous air,Smoothes out with a skilful hand Her waves of golden hair;But the tell tale roses on her cheek, So changing yet so bright,And downcast, earnest eye betray New thoughts are hers to-night.Then say what is the fairy spell, Around her beauty thrown,Lending a new and softer charm To every look and tone?It is the hidden consciousness - The blissful, joyous thoughtThat she, at length hath wholly won The heart she long had sought.To-morrow is her bridal day, That day of hopes and fears,Of partings from beloved friends, Of sunshine and of tears:To-morrow will she says the words, Those words whose import deepWill f...
Rosanna Eleanor Leprohon
Little Charlie.
A violet grew by the river-side,And gladdened all hearts with its bloom;While over the fields, on the scented air,It breathed a rich perfume.But the clouds grew dark in the angry sky,And its portals were opened wide;And the heavy rain beat down the flowerThat grew by the river-side.Not far away in a pleasant home,There lived a little boy,Whose cheerful face and childish graceFilled every heart with joy.He wandered one day to the river's verge,With no one near to save;And the heart that we loved with a boundless loveWas stilled in the restless wave.The sky grew dark to our tearful eyes,And we bade farewell to joy;For our hearts were bound by a sorrowful tieTo the grave of the little boy.The birds still sing in...
Horatio Alger, Jr.
Sonnets I - Desponding Father! Mark This Altered Bough,
Desponding Father! mark this altered bough,So beautiful of late, with sunshine warmed,Or moist with dews; what more unsightly now,Its blossoms shriveled, and its fruit, if formed,Invisible? yet Spring her genial browKnits not o'er that discolouring and decayAs false to expectation. Nor fret thouAt like unlovely process in the MayOf human life: a Stripling's graces blow,Fade and are shed, that from their timely fall(Misdeem it not a cankerous change) may growRich mellow bearings, that for thanks shall call:In all men, sinful is it to be slowTo hope in Parents, sinful above all.
William Wordsworth
Years Ago.
Near the banks of that lone river, Where the water-lilies grow,Breathed the fairest flower that ever Bloomed and faded years ago.Now we met and loved and parted, None on earth can ever know--Nor how pure and gentle-hearted Beamed the mourned one years ago!Like the stream with lilies laden, Will life's future current flow,Till in heaven I meet the maiden Fondly cherished years ago.Hearts that love like mine forget not; They're the same in weal or wo;And that star of memory set not In the grave of years ago.
George Pope Morris
Market-Night.
'O Winds, howl not so long and loud;Nor with your vengeance arm the snow:Bear hence each heavy-loaded cloud;And let the twinkling Star-beams glow.'Now sweeping floods rush down the slope,Wide scattering ruin. - Stars, shine soon!No other light my Love can hope;Midnight will want the joyous Moon.'O guardian Spirits! - Ye that dwellWhere woods, and pits, and hollow ways,The lone night-trav'ler's fancy swellWith fearful tales, of older days, -'Press round him: - guide his willing steedThrough darkness, dangers, currents, snows;Wait where, from shelt'ring thickets freed,The dreary Heath's rude whirlwind blows.'From darkness rushing o'er his way,The Thorn's white load it bears on high!Where the short furze ...
Robert Bloomfield
Fragment: 'I Would Not Be A King'.
I would not be a king - enoughOf woe it is to love;The path to power is steep and rough,And tempests reign above.I would not climb the imperial throne;'Tis built on ice which fortune's sunThaws in the height of noon.Then farewell, king, yet were I one,Care would not come so soon.Would he and I were far awayKeeping flocks on Himalay!
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Ending Up
reads likeliving down -a coconut arriving with the tide,bottles perched in sandthe blue glasscolour or imprisoned dreamsgenie of a bottle cap.Ending up.the brow or a gondola overturnedsees memories squared away -the window of the envelopean all too foggy membrane.Turning out likeending upno check-out time ornon-existant room servicein a flea-bag motel.
Paul Cameron Brown
In Mortem Meditare.
DYING THOUGHTS.As Life's receding sunset fades And night descends,I calmly watch the gathering shades,As darkness stealthily invades And daylight ends.Earth's span is drawing to its close, With every breath;My pain-racked brain no respite knows,Yet shrinks it, from the grim repose It feels in death.The curtain falls on Life's last scene, The end is neared;At last I face death's somber screen,The fleeting joys which intervene Have disappeared.And as a panoramic scroll The past unreels;The mocking past, beyond control,Though buried, as a parchment roll, Its tale reveals.I stand before the dread, unknown, Yet solemn fact;I see the seeds of foll...
Alfred Castner King
Ursula
There is a village in a southern land,By rounded hills closed in on every hand.The streets slope steeply to the market-square,Long lines of white-washed houses, clean and fair,With roofs irregular, and steps of stoneAscending to the front of every one.The people swarthy, idle, full of mirth,Live mostly by the tillage of the earth.Upon the northern hill-top, looking down,Like some sequestered saint upon the town,Stands the great convent. On a summer night,Ten years ago, the moon with rising lightMade all the convent towers as clear as day,While still in deepest shade the village lay.Both light and shadow with repose were filled,The village sounds, the convent bells were stilled.No foot in all the streets was now asti...
Robert Fuller Murray
Red Rock Camp. - A Tale Of Early Colorado.
My simple story is of those times ere the magic power of steamFirst whirled the traveller o'er the plains with the swiftness of a dream,Reducing to a few days' time the journey of many a week,That fell of old to the miner's lot ere he "sighted" tall Pikes Peak.'Neath liquid sunshine filling the air, 'mid masses of wild flowers gay,A prairie waggon followed the track that led o'er the plains away;And most of those 'neath its canvas roof were of lawless type and rude -Miners, broad-chested and strongly built, a reckless, gold-seeking brood.Yet two of the number surely seemed most strangely out of place,A girl with fragile, graceful form, shy look, and beauteous face,One who had wrought out the old, old tale, left her home and friends for aye,Braved family frowns a...
Fragment: Welcome Joy, And Welcome Sorrow
"Under the flagOf each his faction, they to battle bringTheir embryo atoms."- Milton.Welcome joy, and welcome sorrow,Lethe's weed and Hermes' feather;Come to-day, and come to-morrow,I do love you both together!I love to mark sad faces in fair weather;And hear a merry laugh amid the thunder;Fair and foul I love together.Meadows sweet where flames are under,And a giggle at a wonder;Visage sage at pantomine;Funeral, and steeple-chime;Infant playing with a skull;Morning fair, and shipwreck'd hull;Nightshade with the woodbine kissing;Serpents in red roses hissing;Cleopatra regal-dress'dWith the aspic at her breast;Dancing music, music sad,Both together, sane and mad;Muses bright and muses ...
John Keats
The Well-Beloved
I wayed by star and planet shineTowards the dear one's homeAt Kingsbere, there to make her mineWhen the next sun upclomb.I edged the ancient hill and woodBeside the Ikling Way,Nigh where the Pagan temple stoodIn the world's earlier day.And as I quick and quicker walkedOn gravel and on green,I sang to sky, and tree, or talkedOf her I called my queen.- "O faultless is her dainty form,And luminous her mind;She is the God-created normOf perfect womankind!"A shape whereon one star-blink gleamedGlode softly by my side,A woman's; and her motion seemedThe motion of my bride.And yet methought she'd drawn erstwhileAdown the ancient leaze,Where once were pile and peristyleFor men's id...
Thomas Hardy
The First Quarrel
I.Wait a little, you say, you are sure it ll all come right,But the boy was born i trouble, an looks so wan an so white:Wait! an once I ha waitedI hadnt to wait for long.Now I wait, wait, wait for Harry.No, no, you are doing me wrong!Harry and I were married: the boy can hold up his head,The boy was born in wedlock, but after my man was dead;I ha workd for him fifteen years, an I work an I wait to the end.I am all alone in the world, an you are my only friend.II.Doctor, if you can wait, Ill tell you the tale o my life.When Harry an I were children, he calld me his own little wife;I was happy when I was with him, an sorry when he was away.An when we playd together, I loved him better than play;He workt me the daisy chainhe ma...
Alfred Lord Tennyson
The Bell
It is the bell of death I hear,Which tells me my own time is near,When I must join those quiet soulsWhere nothing lives but worms and moles;And not come through the grass again,Like worms and moles, for breath or rain;Yet let none weep when my life's through,For I myself have wept for few.The only things that knew me wellWere children, dogs, and girls that fell;I bought poor children cakes and sweets,Dogs heard my voice and danced the streets;And, gentle to a fallen lass,I made her weep for what she was.Good men and women know not me.Nor love nor hate the mystery.
William Henry Davies
Moly
When by the wall the tiger-flower swingsA head of sultry slumber and aroma;And by the path, whereon the blown rose flingsIts obsolete beauty, the long lilies foam aWhite place of perfume, like a beautiful breastBetween the pansy fire of the west,And poppy mist of moonrise in the east,This heartache will have ceased.The witchcraft of soft music and sweet sleepLet it beguile the burthen from my spirit,And white dreams reap me as strong reapers reapThe ripened grain and full blown blossom near it;Let me behold how gladness gives the wholeThe transformed countenance of my own soulBetween the sunset and the risen moonLet sorrow vanish soon.And these things then shall keep me company:The elfins of the dew; the spirit of laughterWho haunts...
Madison Cawein
The wind makes moan, the water runneth chill;I hear the nymphs go crying through the brake;And roaming mournfully from hill to hillThe maenads all are silent for his sake!He loved thy pipe, O wreathed and piping Pan!So play'st thou sadly, lone within thine hollow;He was thy blood, if ever mortal man,Therefore thou weepest - even thou, Apollo!But O, the grieving of the Little Things,Above the pipe and lyre, throughout the woods!The beating of a thousand airy wings,The cry of all the fragile multitudes!The moth flits desolate, the tree-toad calls,Telling the sorrow of the elf and fay;The cricket, little harper of the walls,Puts up his harp - hath quite forgot to play!And risen on these winter paths anew,The wilding b...
Margaret Steele Anderson